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Physician and Pharmacist: Attitudes, Facilitators, and Barriers to Prescribing Naloxone for Home Rescue. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated barriers to naloxone prescribing among healthcare providers in an academic health system after implementing an education and distribution program.* -
  • Researchers conducted a mixed-methods study with 72 participants, revealing that time constraints were the most significant barrier, alongside four broader themes such as provider competency and healthcare system factors.* -
  • Despite previous findings and educational efforts, the study identified that challenges in naloxone prescribing persist, suggesting the need for improvements in the overdose education and naloxone distribution program.*

Article Abstract

Background And Objectives: We implemented a naloxone education and distribution program in our academic health system. Despite the program, naloxone prescribing was not fully realized. This study aimed to identify the barriers to prescribing.

Methods: We conducted a prospective, cross-sectional, mixed-methods study of naloxone prescribers. Participants completed a questionnaire regarding their prescribing practices, attitudes, facilitators, and barriers to prescribing naloxone. Participants were then invited for an interview to further explore these topics and elicit more in-depth explanations.

Results: Sixty-four physicians and eight pharmacists completed the questionnaire (n = 72). The most commonly reported barrier to prescribing naloxone was time constraints (33%). During the interviews, 14 subthemes emerged within four themes: provider competency, provider beliefs, health care system, and patient factors/social climate.

Discussion: Prescribers identified barriers to naloxone prescribing despite implementation of an institutional overdose education and naloxone distribution (OEND) program. The results were similar to those previously reported prior to initiation of such programs.

Conclusion: In this study, we examined barriers and facilitators to naloxone prescribing. Although previous studies have shown that health care providers endorsed similar barriers, our study indicates that some of those barriers persist despite a concerted effort to educate and promote prescribing via an OEND. While our study is limited by a small, selective sample size the results indicate that improvements to our OEND program are warranted.

Scientific Significance: Our study addressed an unexplored area of OEND research and may inform future program development. (Am J Addict 2019;00:00-00).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ajad.12982DOI Listing

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